Uniparental
Guides
Trichadenotecnum castum
common barklouse
Trichadenotecnum castum is a uniparental barklouse species in the family Psocidae, described by Betz in 1983. It is one of three obligately parthenogenetic species derived from the biparental ancestor T. alexanderae. Populations are composed exclusively of females that reproduce via obligate thelytokous parthenogenesis. The species belongs to the T. alexanderae species complex, a group of closely related barklice distinguished primarily by reproductive mode and subtle morphological differences.
Trichadenotecnum merum
common barklouse
Trichadenotecnum merum is a uniparental barklouse species described in 1983 as part of the Trichadenotecnum alexanderae species complex. It reproduces exclusively through obligatory parthenogenesis (thelytoky), with populations composed entirely of females. The species was established through mating tests, life history observations, and morphological analysis across the geographic range of the species complex. As a member of the family Psocidae, it belongs to a group commonly known as common barklice.